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  <copyright>Copyright (c) 2010 The New York Times Company.  All Rights Reserved.</copyright>
  <num_results>1922</num_results>
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    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/opinion/12friedman.html</url>
      <column>Op-Ed Columnist</column>
      <section>Opinion</section>
      <byline>By THOMAS L. FRIEDMAN</byline>
      <title>We’re No. 1(1)!</title>
      <abstract>Who’s No. 1? With leaders who can’t ask the people to make some sacrifices and an education system that’s slipping, it isn’t the United States.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-12</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>UNITED STATES ECONOMY</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>EDUCATION (K-12)</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>UNITED STATES POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>INFRASTRUCTURE (PUBLIC WORKS)</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet>
        <org_facet_item>UNITED STATES</org_facet_item>
      </org_facet>
      <per_facet>
        <per_facet_item>OBAMA, BARACK</per_facet_item>
      </per_facet>
      <geo_facet>
        <geo_facet_item>DEMOCRATIC PARTY</geo_facet_item>
        <geo_facet_item>REPUBLICAN PARTY</geo_facet_item>
      </geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>Thomas L. Friedman</caption>
          <copyright>Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times</copyright>
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        </media_item>
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    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/07/health/views/07mind.html</url>
      <column>Mind</column>
      <section>Health</section>
      <byline>By BENEDICT CAREY</byline>
      <title>Forget What You Know About Good Study Habits</title>
      <abstract>Psychologists have discovered that some of the most hallowed advice on study habits is flat wrong.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-07</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>PSYCHOLOGY AND PSYCHOLOGISTS</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>MEDICINE AND HEALTH</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>RESEARCH</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>EDUCATION AND SCHOOLS</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>TESTS AND TESTING</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>MEMORY</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet></per_facet>
      <geo_facet></geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption></caption>
          <copyright>Ellen Weinstein</copyright>
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    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/opinion/12rich.html</url>
      <column>Op-Ed Columnist</column>
      <section>Opinion</section>
      <byline>By FRANK RICH</byline>
      <title>Time for This Big Dog to Bite Back</title>
      <abstract>It’s time for President Obama to call out the powerful interests who are pulling the G.O.P.’s strings, and filling their coffers.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-12</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>UNITED STATES ECONOMY</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>LABOR AND JOBS</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>AMERICAN RECOVERY AND REINVESTMENT ACT (2009)</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet>
        <per_facet_item>OBAMA, BARACK</per_facet_item>
        <per_facet_item>ROOSEVELT, FRANKLIN DELANO</per_facet_item>
        <per_facet_item>SCHWARZMAN, STEPHEN A</per_facet_item>
      </per_facet>
      <geo_facet>
        <geo_facet_item>DEMOCRATIC PARTY</geo_facet_item>
        <geo_facet_item>VERIZON COMMUNICATIONS</geo_facet_item>
      </geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>Frank Rich</caption>
          <copyright>Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times</copyright>
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          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption></caption>
          <copyright>Barry Blitt</copyright>
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    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/opinion/12kristof.html</url>
      <column>Op-Ed Columnist</column>
      <section>Opinion</section>
      <byline>By NICHOLAS D. KRISTOF</byline>
      <title>Is This America?</title>
      <abstract>Bravo to those religious leaders who are fighting the anti-Islam frenzy.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-12</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>MUSLIM-AMERICANS</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>SEPTEMBER 11 (2001)</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>ISLAM</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet>
        <per_facet_item>OBAMA, BARACK</per_facet_item>
      </per_facet>
      <geo_facet>
        <geo_facet_item>PARK51</geo_facet_item>
      </geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>Nicholas D. Kristof</caption>
          <copyright>Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times</copyright>
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    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/business/12fees.html</url>
      <column></column>
      <section>Business</section>
      <byline>By JANET MORRISSEY</byline>
      <title>Resale Fees That Only Developers Could Love</title>
      <abstract>An increasingly common fee allows developers to collect 1 percent of the sales price from the seller every time the property changes hands for the next 99 years.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-12</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>UNITED STATES ECONOMY</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>HOUSING AND REAL ESTATE</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>SALES</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>PRICES (FARES, FEES AND RATES)</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet></per_facet>
      <geo_facet></geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>Ted Thieman is among developers seeking revenue from a fee paid every time a house is resold.</caption>
          <copyright>Michael Houghton for The New York Times</copyright>
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    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/opinion/12dowd.html</url>
      <column>Op-Ed Columnist</column>
      <section>Opinion</section>
      <byline>By MAUREEN DOWD</byline>
      <title>When Peggy Left Barry</title>
      <abstract>The president campaigned on a promise of change, but some Obamicans, or Republicans who voted Obama, don’t see much of it.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-12</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>UNITED STATES POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>THIRD-PARTY MOVES (US)</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>ELECTIONS</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet>
        <per_facet_item>OBAMA, BARACK</per_facet_item>
      </per_facet>
      <geo_facet>
        <geo_facet_item>SENATE</geo_facet_item>
        <geo_facet_item>DEMOCRATIC PARTY</geo_facet_item>
        <geo_facet_item>REPUBLICAN PARTY</geo_facet_item>
        <geo_facet_item>HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES</geo_facet_item>
      </geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption></caption>
          <copyright>Fred R. Conrad/The New York Times</copyright>
          <media-metadata>
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    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/weekinreview/12rosenthal.html</url>
      <column></column>
      <section>Week in Review</section>
      <byline>By ELISABETH ROSENTHAL</byline>
      <title>Testing, the Chinese Way</title>
      <abstract>American education’s “no test” philosophy for young children has come under assault as government programs strongly promote the practice, which is widespread in Asia.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-12</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>CHILDREN AND YOUTH</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>EDUCATION (K-12)</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>TESTS AND TESTING</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet></per_facet>
      <geo_facet></geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption></caption>
          <copyright>Leigh Wells</copyright>
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    </result>
    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/travel/12hours.html</url>
      <column></column>
      <section>Travel</section>
      <byline>By SHAILA DEWAN</byline>
      <title>36 Hours in Charleston, S.C.</title>
      <abstract>This graceful Southern city has new restaurants, shops and transformed neighborhoods to discover.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-12</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet></des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet></per_facet>
      <geo_facet></geo_facet>
      <media></media>
    </result>
    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/11/world/europe/11germany.html</url>
      <column></column>
      <section>World</section>
      <byline>By NICHOLAS KULISH</byline>
      <title>German Identity, Long Dormant, Reasserts Itself</title>
      <abstract>A more confident nation has asserted itself in foreign policy, despite economic troubles and some internal dissent.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-11</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>POLITICS AND GOVERNMENT</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>ECONOMIC CONDITIONS AND TRENDS</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>IMMIGRATION AND EMIGRATION</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>BERLIN WALL</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>HOLOCAUST AND THE NAZI ERA</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>DEFENSE AND MILITARY FORCES</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet>
        <org_facet_item>GERMANY</org_facet_item>
      </org_facet>
      <per_facet>
        <per_facet_item>MERKEL, ANGELA</per_facet_item>
      </per_facet>
      <geo_facet>
        <geo_facet_item>EUROPEAN UNION</geo_facet_item>
      </geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>Jens John raising a variation of the German flag in his garden in Brandenburg an der Havel, Germany. A truck driver, Mr. John has often been without work in the economic downturn.</caption>
          <copyright>Gordon Welters for The New York Times</copyright>
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          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>The city of Chemnitz has returned to its historic name of after being known as Karl-Marx-Stadt during the Cold War.</caption>
          <copyright>Gordon Welters for The New York Times</copyright>
          <media-metadata>
            <media-metadata_item>
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        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>Günter Grass was accompanied by a drummer as he read from his war novel “The Tin Drum” in Frankfurt last year.</caption>
          <copyright></copyright>
          <media-metadata>
            <media-metadata_item>
              <url>http://graphics8.nytimes.com/images/2010/09/11/world/GERMANY3/GERMANY3-thumbStandard.jpg</url>
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    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/11/your-money/11money.html</url>
      <column>Your Money</column>
      <section>Your Money</section>
      <byline>By TARA SIEGEL BERNARD</byline>
      <title>In Using Software to Write a Will, a Lawyer Is Still Helpful</title>
      <abstract>Four wills, written using four different computer programs, point up some strengths and some surprising weaknesses.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-11</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>WILLS AND ESTATES</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>LEGAL PROFESSION</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>SOFTWARE</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet></per_facet>
      <geo_facet></geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption></caption>
          <copyright>Robert Neubecker</copyright>
          <media-metadata>
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          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption><![CDATA[Laura M. Twomey, a partner at Simpson Thacher & Bartlett, found some holes in all four of the computer-generated wills.]]></caption>
          <copyright>Ruby Washington/The New York Times</copyright>
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    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/world/europe/12raids.html</url>
      <column>Above the Law</column>
      <section>World</section>
      <byline>By CLIFFORD J. LEVY</byline>
      <title>Russia Uses Microsoft to Suppress Dissent</title>
      <abstract>One of the authorities’ new tactics for quelling dissent in Russia is confiscating computers under the pretext of searching for pirated Microsoft software.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-12</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>INDUSTRIAL ESPIONAGE</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>SURVEILLANCE OF CITIZENS BY GOVERNMENT</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>SEARCH AND SEIZURE</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>COMPUTER SECURITY</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet>
        <org_facet_item>RUSSIA</org_facet_item>
      </org_facet>
      <per_facet></per_facet>
      <geo_facet></geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>Baikal Environmental Wave protested in June against a paper factory on the shores of Lake Baikal, months after security forces seized its computers.</caption>
          <copyright>Valeri Nistratov for The New York Times</copyright>
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        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>Surveillance video shot by the police shows plainclothes officers confiscating computers from Baikal Environmental Wave.</caption>
          <copyright>AS Baikal TV</copyright>
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    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/opinion/12khakpour.html</url>
      <column>Op-Ed Contributor</column>
      <section>Opinion</section>
      <byline>By POROCHISTA KHAKPOUR</byline>
      <title>My Nine Years as a Middle-Eastern American</title>
      <abstract>Was the Bush era better for U.S. Muslims?</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-12</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>SEPTEMBER 11 (2001)</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>ARAB-AMERICANS</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>ISLAM</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet>
        <org_facet_item>IRAN</org_facet_item>
        <org_facet_item>MIDDLE EAST</org_facet_item>
      </org_facet>
      <per_facet>
        <per_facet_item>AHMADINEJAD, MAHMOUD</per_facet_item>
        <per_facet_item>BUSH, GEORGE W</per_facet_item>
        <per_facet_item>OBAMA, BARACK</per_facet_item>
      </per_facet>
      <geo_facet></geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption></caption>
          <copyright>Anna Bhushan</copyright>
          <media-metadata>
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    </result>
    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/opinion/12sun1.html</url>
      <column>Editorial</column>
      <section>Opinion</section>
      <byline></byline>
      <title>Is Newer Better? Not Always</title>
      <abstract>Without curtailing the use of unnecessary and overly costly new technologies and surgical procedures, there is little hope of restraining the relentless rise in health care costs.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-11</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>HEALTH INSURANCE AND MANAGED CARE</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>MEDICINE AND HEALTH</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>REFORM AND REORGANIZATION</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>SURGERY AND SURGEONS</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>DOCTORS</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet>
        <per_facet_item>OBAMA, BARACK</per_facet_item>
      </per_facet>
      <geo_facet>
        <geo_facet_item>HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES</geo_facet_item>
        <geo_facet_item>JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN MEDICAL ASSN</geo_facet_item>
        <geo_facet_item>HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES DEPARTMENT</geo_facet_item>
        <geo_facet_item>CONGRESSIONAL BUDGET OFFICE</geo_facet_item>
      </geo_facet>
      <media></media>
    </result>
    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/us/12filene.html</url>
      <column>Boston Journal</column>
      <section>U.S.</section>
      <byline>By ABBY GOODNOUGH</byline>
      <title>A Downtown Hub Is Missed, and a Replacement Is Stalled</title>
      <abstract>Cities like Boston that gave up iconic buildings or businesses for outsized projects that may now never happen are suffering from a rising sense of regret.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-12</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>HISTORIC BUILDINGS AND SITES</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>DEMOLITION</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>SHOPPING AND RETAIL</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet></per_facet>
      <geo_facet>
        <geo_facet_item>FILENE'S BASEMENT CORPORATION</geo_facet_item>
      </geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>The original Filene’s Basement opened in Boston in 1909 and served as a heart of the community.</caption>
          <copyright>From the film, Voices from the Basement</copyright>
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    </result>
    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/movies/12scott.html</url>
      <column></column>
      <section>Movies</section>
      <byline>By A. O. SCOTT</byline>
      <title>Are Films Bad, or Is TV Just Better?</title>
      <abstract>Attendance is down. At the water cooler, they’re talking about “Mad Men.” It’s hand-wringing time for cinephiles.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-12</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>MOVIES</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>TELEVISION</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet></per_facet>
      <geo_facet></geo_facet>
      <media></media>
    </result>
    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/science/12deepsea.html</url>
      <column></column>
      <section>Science</section>
      <byline>By WILLIAM J. BROAD</byline>
      <title>China Explores a Frontier 2 Miles Deep</title>
      <abstract>China has unveiled a submersible designed to go deeper than any other in the world, giving it access to 99.8 percent of the ocean floor and its minerals.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-12</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>OCEANS</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>METALS AND MINERALS</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet>
        <org_facet_item>CHINA</org_facet_item>
      </org_facet>
      <per_facet></per_facet>
      <geo_facet></geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>The Jiaolong submersible planted a Chinese flag on the bottom of the South China Sea during a two-mile-deep dive in June.</caption>
          <copyright>Wang Wensheng/ChinaFotoPress</copyright>
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    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/11/your-money/11shortcuts.html</url>
      <column>Shortcuts</column>
      <section>Your Money</section>
      <byline>By ALINA TUGEND</byline>
      <title>The 3,000-Mile Oil Change Is Pretty Much History</title>
      <abstract>Knowing how often to change your car oil takes more information than in the past. The good news is that it’s probably less often.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-11</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>ENVIRONMENT</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>AUTOMOBILES</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>CONSUMER BEHAVIOR</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet></per_facet>
      <geo_facet></geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>Kieron Kohlmann changing the oil in a 2007 Dodge Charger in Union Grove, Wis. Changing the oil every 3,000 miles is no longer a good guideline for cars bought in the last seven or eight years, says Philip Reed of the car site Edmunds.com.</caption>
          <copyright>Gregory Shaver/The Journal Times, via Associated Press</copyright>
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    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/us/politics/12boehner.html</url>
      <column></column>
      <section>U.S.</section>
      <byline>By ERIC LIPTON</byline>
      <title>A G.O.P. Leader Tightly Bound to Lobbyists</title>
      <abstract>As Democrats try to cast John A. Boehner of Ohio, the House minority leader, as the face of the Republican Party, his ties to lobbyists are under attack.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-12</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>LOBBYING AND LOBBYISTS</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet>
        <per_facet_item>BOEHNER, JOHN A</per_facet_item>
      </per_facet>
      <geo_facet>
        <geo_facet_item>HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES</geo_facet_item>
        <geo_facet_item>REPUBLICAN PARTY</geo_facet_item>
      </geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>Representative John A. Boehner of Ohio, center, has used his business ties to become a leading fund-raiser for Republicans.</caption>
          <copyright>David Lassman/ Post-Standard</copyright>
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          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>Representative John A. Boehner arriving for a fund-raiser for Ann Marie Buerkle, a House candidate from New York.</caption>
          <copyright>David Lassman/The Post-Standard</copyright>
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    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/09/12/us/12shelter.html</url>
      <column></column>
      <section>U.S.</section>
      <byline>By MICHAEL LUO</byline>
      <title>Number of Families in Shelters Rises</title>
      <abstract>From 2007 through 2009, the number of families in homeless shelters leapt to 170,000 from 131,000. Those numbers could easily climb this year.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-09-12</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet>
        <des_facet_item>HOMELESS PERSONS</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>HOUSING AND REAL ESTATE</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>UNEMPLOYMENT</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>FEDERAL AID (US)</des_facet_item>
        <des_facet_item>CHILDREN AND YOUTH</des_facet_item>
      </des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet></per_facet>
      <geo_facet></geo_facet>
      <media>
        <media_item>
          <type>image</type>
          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>Nick Griffith with his daughter, Ava, and son, Ethan, at Crossroads Rhode Island, a shelter in Providence where the family has lived since last month.</caption>
          <copyright>Katherine Taylor for The New York Times</copyright>
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          <subtype>photo</subtype>
          <caption>Lacey Lennon, at a shelter with her son, Ethan Griffith, applying for housing programs.</caption>
          <copyright>Katherine Taylor for The New York Times</copyright>
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    <result>
      <url>http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/13/your-money/13shortcuts.html</url>
      <column>Shortcuts</column>
      <section>Your Money</section>
      <byline>By ALINA TUGEND</byline>
      <title>For the Dishwasher’s Sake, Go Easy on the Detergent</title>
      <abstract>Go easy on the detergent in dishwashers and washing machines, and never clean your oven the day before Thanksgiving.</abstract>
      <published_date>2010-03-13</published_date>
      <source>The New York Times</source>
      <des_facet></des_facet>
      <org_facet></org_facet>
      <per_facet></per_facet>
      <geo_facet></geo_facet>
      <media></media>
    </result>
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</result_set>
